We pick up right where we left off: In Part One of this article
Gary talked about how he got into the blank building business, his involvement
in the graphite blank industry and how G.Loomis was started – on a handshake and
the backing from a friend. In Part Two, Gary talks about his days with G.Loomis,
the Shimano buyout and what he has in store for North Fork Composites.

By 1997, Gary had built G.Loomis into one of the
most renowned blank and rod manufacturers in the world

New Equipment: As
mentioned in Part One, Gary knew the quality and durability of his blanks hinged
on the equipment the blanks were rolled on. When starting G.Loomis, he set
forth to redesign that equipment. Thanks to his close friend, Dennis Highby, at
Cabela’s, he was not only able to finish his last piece of equipment but he also
hit the ground running with a 280 blank-per-day blanket order from Cabela’s.

What
most people don’t realize, though, is what Gary's equipment did.

“The new
equipment design was a six-month ordeal,” Gary said. “I took everything I had
learned from my time in the industry and building equipment in my past life as a
machinist and used that experience to design the best equipment for
manufacturing blanks.

“Making
blanks requires rolling the graphite material around a steel mandrel using a
tremendous amount of pressure. At that time, the industry standard was 40 psi.
Rolling the blanks at 40psi results in trapping air bubbles between the graphite
cloth and the resin. This caused a lot of blank failures.

“The
reason for this is as a blank is placed under stress, you have many forces
acting upon it at the same time,” he said. “On the bottom of the blank, the
material is under compression while the top of the blank, with respect to the
bend, it’s under expansion. Not only do you have these forces acting on each
other you also have what is known as hoop-stress.

“Hoop-stress happens when pressure is put on a cylindrical object, like a
tubular blank. If you look at a cross-section of a blank, you’ll notice it’s a
circle. When you apply pressure to a blank, this circle wants to become oval in
shape and if enough pressure is applied, the blank will collapse on itself.

“This is
where air bubbles become a major problem with blank construction. The bubbles
decrease the hoop strength of the finished blank. This is why it was so
important for me to design a piece of equipment that could roll a blank under a
lot more pressure, thus driving these small air bubbles out of the materials.
The equipment I designed could exert 250 psi on the materials while rolling them
on the mandrel, and do so in a way that the pressure is equal on all parts of
the blank as it rolls. The end result was a lighter and denser blank that was
stronger than any other graphite blank made at the time.”

The
Sale of G.Loomis to Shimano:
During the early 1980s, Gary made blanks for Cabela’s and his own company. But,
once word got out about the quality of his blanks, many OEMs across the nation
began using his blanks for their products.

“At one
time I was making blanks for nearly all the rod companies in the U.S. that were
unable to build their own,” he said. “It was a fun business and most of these
people are still friends of mine. I would like to become their blank provider
again, offering them a domestic product while keeping jobs in the U.S.”

By 1997,
Gary had built G.Loomis into one of the most renowned blank and rod
manufacturers in the world. Unfortunately, he had been delivered some bad news
in 1995 that was about to change his life.

“In ’95
I was diagnosed with prostate cancer,” he said. “I didn’t believe I had it so I
ended up going to the Mayo Clinic so they could prove it to me. They told me I
not only had the cancer but it had also leaked out to the surrounding areas - 37
radiation treatments followed.

“After
the radiation treatments, they implanted 91 radioactive pellets into my prostate
gland and then waited to see what the effects would be. My PSA went down but it
didn’t take long for it to come back up. That’s when they told me I had 18
months to live.

“I knew
that if I wanted to leave anything for my family, I better sell the business
now. That’s what made up my mind to sell the company in 1997. I had a few
offers, some for more money than Shimano's offer, but I sold to Shimano because
I had been fishing their reels since the 60s, and felt that the best reel
company should own the best rod company. They also guaranteed that there would
be no changes to the business for five years. G.Loomis had become a family, and
I wanted to make sure all of my employees would still have jobs.

“As part
of the sale, G.Loomis kept me on as a consultant under a three year contract.
They wanted five, but I told them I was unlikely to be around for that long.
Turns out, I stayed for over 10 years trying to teach them what G.Loomis was all
about.

“At
first, G.Loomis kept moving on the path, but over time, Shimano had really
changed the company we built. I realized that it was putting a lot of strain on
me and the people at work were being pulled in two directions. They had a
loyalty to me, but their paychecks were coming from Shimano. When I saw that I
was pulling them in a different direction, it was clear to me that it was time
to leave.

Gary
Becomes a Conservationist? His
ten years at Shimano were not a loss, though.

“It was
a good ten years, though, because it gave me a lot of time to work on recovering
the salmon. I had a lot of love for those fish, which I hadn't shown to them –
unless you count an introduction to the dinner plate as love – and I felt it was
my time to give back to them. I and five fishermen buds started an organization
called Fish First in 1995 (www.fishfirst.org)
that was trying to bring back a run of fish to Cedar Creek, a tributary of the
North Fork of the Lewis River.

“The
Coho run had declined to 32 salmon and a few of us really wanted to bring the
fish back. So, in 1995, those close friends of mine and I met with the
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, and proposed to make habitat
improvements, nutrient enhancements and reintroduce Coho through egg boxes.
WDFW asked why we wanted a dead stream like Cedar Creek. We said, ‘if it's
dead, we can't screw it up so give it to us.’ WDFW said, ‘okay.’

“We went
to work, for ten years and by 2005, that run of 32 fish became 16,250 fish. The
Coho had returned.

“Our
success was short lived,” he noted. “Once the gillnetters discovered a healthy
run of fish, they started netting them. At that point, we realized we had to
work on commercial nonselective harvest. So, we searched for a way to influence
fish policy at national, regional and local levels. It turned out that there is
a group that is wildly successful in the Gulf States and up the East Coast.
It’s based out of Texas, the Coastal Conservation Association (www.joincca.org).
We called and convinced them to let us expand their organization out here in the
Pacific Northwest. Now we have 10,000 members in Washington and Oregon along
with lobbyists in both state capitals and in Washington DC.”

Gary
isn't content with 10,000 members, though. He wants to turn CCA Washington and
CCA Oregon in to an organization with enough power to save salmon and steelhead
from destructive harvest methods. To do that, he says he needs 50,000 members.
In talking to him, there’s no doubt he can make it happen.

A New
Start: “I left
G.Loomis and got involved with a fly and fishing lure company that I was part
owner of,” Gary said. “The lures would have been endorsed by me. This upset
Shimano, who believed they’d bought my name and they threatened to sue me over
the use of my name.

“What
happened next is probably the subject of a different article, and I'm not ready
to tell the story in detail, but in short, Shimano sued me. I racked up
$300,000 in legal bills, I was outspent by Shimano, and we settled under terms I
can live with. Good thing too, because after I left G.Loomis I had hundreds of
people calling me to get back into the fishing business. So, I felt to help out
the industry that made me who I am, the best thing to do was make blanks for
custom rod builders again.

“That’s
where I am today. I’m back to build the best blank in the world so the best
rods can be built. Not bad for a guy that ten years ago had only 18 months to
live.”

Beating Cancer:
When you're given 18 months to live, you tend to make them count by doing things
you love. For Gary and his wife Susie, that means hunting as well as fishing.
They booked a trip to Africa. What happened there is not only astonishing but
may be the reason he is still designing the world’s best blanks.

“I
wanted to go to Africa to hunt on my birthday so we went to a camp in Zambia,
five days from anywhere,” he said. “When we got there, my buddy wanted to get
me a birthday present. So, one night when we got back to camp there were all
these people including a witch doctor, his interns and a missionary. They all
started chanting and playing drums. The witch doctor went into a trance and
turned to the missionary and said something. The missionary asked me if it was
okay for the witch doctor to put his hands on me. They ask this because of the
AIDS epidemic. I said, ‘heck yes, AIDS might give me five years more to live
where the doctor gave me only 18 months.’ The whole experience was just like an
old National Geographic article.

“The
witch doctor was sweating like a 5th grader in a spelling bee when he came out
of his trance. He spoke to the missionary and the missionary told me, ‘He says
you’re in perfect health but you have a sickness in your lower stomach.’ I
asked, ‘Who told him?’ The missionary said, ‘I didn’t know your problem and who
could speak this dialect anyway?’

“Then
the missionary told me, ‘If you go to his hut tomorrow he has a remedy for you.
Bring three clean bottles.’